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Plan International Announces Clinton Global Initiative Commitment to Promote Equality and Safety in Schools

by Plan International | @janelabous | Plan International
Thursday, 25 September 2014 12:23 GMT

* Any views expressed in this article are those of the author and not of Thomson Reuters Foundation.

NEW YORK, September 23, 2014 --Today, at the 2014 Clinton Global Initiative (CGI) Annual Meeting, Secretary Hillary Clinton and the Honorable Julia Gillard announced the launch of Girls CHARGE! (Collaborative Harnessing Ambition and Resources for Global Education), a program committed to addressing the second generation of issues that prohibit girls from going to and staying in secondary school.

“We know when girls have access to quality education in both primary and secondary schools, cycles of poverty are broken, economies grow, glass ceilings crack and potential is unleashed," said Secretary Clinton. “The scale of this commitment matches the gravity of the challenge. Ensuring every girl receives a quality secondary education will take all of us, governments, civil society, the private sector, multilateral organizations, the entire international community working together.”

Last year at CGI, Secretary Clinton announced the launch of No Ceilings to evaluate the progress women and girls have made since 1995 and to take action to help women and girls become full participants in their economies and societies around the globe. We know that tremendous progress has been made in education — particularly in getting girls enrolled in primary school.  Yet enrollment is just the first step, and despite tremendous progress, girls around the world still face persistent challenges to pursuing their education – the quality and safety of which are not always guaranteed.   At the 2014 CGI annual meeting, No Ceilings has joined with the Center on Universal Education at the Brookings Institution to create CHARGE, a global collective of public, private, and grassroots organizations working to take on the next set of challenges in global girls' education.

Plan International, with more than 20 other actors in the girls’ education field, is involved in this meeting this commitment to millions of girls around the world. Many violations of girls’ rights are the result of gender inequality, exclusion, and injustice. Achieving gender equality is a central objective of Plan’s work as an organization dedicated to promoting and defending children’s rights.

“Plan International welcomes the leadership of Secretary Clinton and former Prime Minister Gillard on girls’ education,” said Nigel Chapman, CEO of Plan International. “The Girls CHARGE commitments made today at the Clinton Global Initiative will tackle the issues currently denying millions of adolescent girls around the world their right to an education.  Plan is pleased to join forces today with leading organisations to contribute its expertise to end violence in and around the schools.”

Children in many countries around the world face considerable challenges that hinder them from fulfilling their full potential. Among these challenges is school-related gender-based violence (SRGBV). SRGBV, in the form of physical and sexual abuse, harassment, and bullying, limits girls’ enrollment, undermines their participation and achievement, and increases absenteeism and dropout rates. In addition, boys are brought up in environments that promote harmful gender norms, roles, and stereotypes.

Plan is committed ending violence in and around schools through the Promoting Equality and Safety in Schools (PEASS) program. PEASS aims to support education systems in Asia to develop zero-tolerance to SRGBV. Through teacher training, it will build the perspective and capacity of teachers in gender-sensitive teaching methodologies, appropriate response mechanisms, codes of conduct, and positive discipline.

The PEASS pilot launched in Vietnam this month, working in 20 schools in Hanoi. After ensuring the model’s effectiveness and efficiency, the Hanoi Department of Education plans to replicate it in 785 schools in the city.

  “Tackling SRGBV effectively requires working at multiple levels, connecting and aligning the interests of children, their families, education and even police and security authorities,” said Tessie San Martin, President and CEO of Plan International USA. “Plan’s child-centered community development approach and our established expertise on gender and child protection means we are well-placed to facilitate the linkages and dialogue necessary to make this type of community-owned programming effective.”

PEASS aims to achieve the following results:

  • At the individual level, the program will build the understanding and skills of girls and boys to practice gender equitable behavior and challenge the use of violence;
  • At the community level, it will support families and communities to actively advocate for schools free from gender-based violence;
  • At the school level, the program will create gender equitable schools and promote a safe learning environment through prevention and effective response mechanisms; and
  • At the institutional and policy levels, the program will facilitate enabling legal frameworks to promote gender equality and protect children from SRGBV.

About the Clinton Global InitiativeEstablished in 2005 by President Bill Clinton, the Clinton Global Initiative (CGI), an initiative of the Clinton Foundation, convenes global leaders to create and implement solutions to the world’s most pressing challenges. CGI Annual Meetings have brought together more than 180 heads of state, 20 Nobel Prize laureates, and hundreds of leading CEOs, heads of foundations and NGOs, major philanthropists, and members of the media. To date, members of the CGI community have made more than 2,900 commitments, which are already improving the lives of more than 430 million people in over 180 countries.

About Plan International Founded in 1937, Plan is one of the world’s oldest and largest children's development organisations. Plan works in 50 developing countries across Africa, Asia and the Americas to promote child rights and lift millions of children out of poverty. Plan is independent, with no religious, political or governmental affiliations. 

 

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